The official blog for singer, writer, director and human rights advocate Aisha and her affiliated web sites.

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts Complains About Negative Public Perception Of The Court

John Roberts

First racist Supreme Court judge,
Antonin Scalia, made bigoted, ignorant remarks about black
people (Antonin Scalia Slammed By Members Of Congress As A Racist Who
Should Be Removed From The Supreme Court) then tried to invoke the name of God and
His role in America, when God in heaven doesn't support the
behavior of such a man or his corrupt judicial colleagues who
are helping to destroy the United States. Now Chief
Justice John Roberts has done an interview complaining about the
negative public perception of the court.

The Washington Post stated, "Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said late Wednesday that partisan
extremism is damaging the public’s perception of the role of the
Supreme Court." The court has made decisions that
cost innocent people their lives. Public perception of the
Supreme Court is very negative. The reason the Google Maps
debacle happened, where the Supreme Court was labeled "The Dumb
F**ks" is because the public labeled them as such and the tech
company failed to edit it (Google Calls Black President Obama's White House 'The Nig*a House'
And The Supreme Court 'Dumb F**ks').

Online searches will also reveal
very negative comments from the American and global public about
the Supreme Court. The comments indicate the court is hated by
many, consistently going against the will of the people to do
the bidding of presidents and special interests.

In the not too distant future, due
to egregiously corrupt decisions the Supreme Court has already
made, the public will petition them far, far less. There will be
a massive decline in cases. Then you guys will have time to play
Scrabble, watch Wheel of Fortune on TV and a riveting show you
guys should be on "American Greed."

STORY SOURCE

The political wars damage
public perception of Supreme Court, Chief Justice Roberts says

February 4 at 9:53 AM - BOSTON — Chief Justice John G.
Roberts Jr. said late Wednesday that partisan extremism is
damaging the public’s perception of the role of the Supreme
Court, recasting the justices as players in the political
process rather than its referees. Divisive battles over
confirmations and mischaracterization of the merits of the
court’s decisions worry him, Roberts told a ballroom crowd of
about 1,000 people at a celebration of Law Day for New England
Law-Boston.

Criticism of the court “doesn’t bother me at all,” Roberts
said, as long as it is not based on a misunderstanding of how
the court differs from the political branches. “It’s usually
discussed as, ‘Oh, you’re in favor of this or you’re in favor of
that,’ ” Roberts said in response to questions from the law
school’s dean, John F. O’Brien.

“In fact, our ruling is that whoever does get to decide this
or that is allowed to do it, and that it’s not unconstitutional,
that it’s consistent with the law,” Roberts said. “But we often
have no policy views on the matter at all, and that’s an
important distinction.”

The court is under heavy criticism from all sides in the
presidential campaigns, with Republican Donald Trump suggesting
he would appoint justices who would overturn the court’s 5-to-4
decision saying gay couples have a constitutional right to marry
and Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders making a
rejection of the court’s Citizen United campaign finance
decision a litmus test for their potential nominees.

And before the justices adjourn in June, the court will
decide a host of issues at the heart of the political debate:
affirmative action in university admissions, abortion
restrictions, the ability of religious objectors to opt out of
the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive coverage obligation, and
President Obama’s plan to shield millions of illegal immigrants
from deportation.

Roberts himself — once touted by Republicans as a
prototypical Supreme Court nominee — has become a focus on the
right. GOP presidential candidate Ted Cruz, the senator from
Texas, said Roberts’s nomination was a mistake, and even former
Florida governor Jeb Bush, whose brother chose Roberts as chief
justice, has criticized him.

The unhappiness arises basically from two of Roberts’s
decisions on the same subject — finding Obama’s health-care act
constitutional and then last year saving it from a potentially
devastating challenge based on the language of the law...